Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum

Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum

Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology Volume 11 Article 10 2021 Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum Samantha A. Bomkamp University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.uwm.edu/fieldnotes Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons, Biological and Physical Anthropology Commons, Linguistic Anthropology Commons, Other Anthropology Commons, and the Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons Recommended Citation Bomkamp, Samantha A. (2021) "Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum," Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology: Vol. 11 , Article 10. Available at: https://dc.uwm.edu/fieldnotes/vol11/iss1/10 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by UWM Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology by an authorized administrator of UWM Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology Volume 11 Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology Volume 11 Number 1 May 2021 Published by the Anthropology Student Union (ASU) at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, USA Editor-in-Chief Ann S. Eberwein Editors Ashley Brennaman Heather Brinkman Cody Schumacher Jessica Skinner Editorial Committee Karissa Annis Laya Liebeseller Bill Balco Ciaran McDonnell Sarah Boncal Cheri Price Josh Driscoll Joshua Rivers Adrienne Frie Katherine Santell Kevin Gartski Katrina Schmidt Dominic Greenlee Tony Schultz Alexis Jordan Faculty Advisor Dr. Bettina Arnold Cover Design Ann S. Eberwein Artist Credit: Sandip Dey - Cave Temple 3, Badami, Karnataka, India. https://commons.wikimedia.org/ w/index.php?curid=21450082 Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Department of Anthropology 3413 N Downer Ave 390 Sabin Hall Milwaukee WI 53211 USA 414.229.4175 [email protected] https://dc.uwm.edu/fieldnotes/ Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology May 2021 Volume 11 (1) Table of Contents About the Contributors 7 Articles Head Strong: Gendered Analysis of Human 10 Representations in Western and Central Continental European Iron Age Iconography Christopher R. Allen, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA The Journey of a Hopewell Site Artifact: Bear 30 Canine with Inlaid Pearl at the Milwaukee Public Museum Katrina Schmitz, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum 50 Samantha A. Bomkamp, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA Digging Through Space: Archaeology in the Star Wars 66 Franchise Karissa Annis, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA Waking the Dead, Speaking to the Living: The Display of 90 Human Remains in Museums Emily R. Stanton, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology May 2021 Volume 11 (1) About the Contributors Christopher Allen is an Anthropology Master’s student at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. His research is focused on gender and status expres- sions in Iron Age European iconography. He is also involved in museum stud- ies and experimental archaeology research. His overall interest is in religious/ cosmological ideologies, power structures, gender studies, and iconography. Karissa Annis is pursuing her Master’s degree in Anthropology at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, in addition to a graduate certificate in museum studies. She received her BA in Classics and Anthropology from the Universi- ty of Alabama in 2018. Her research interests include European archaeology, mortuary archaeology, historic cemeteries, and media studies. She is currently writing her thesis, which is focused on the intersection of past and present found in archaeological themes in popular culture. Samantha A. Bomkamp finished her MS in anthropology at the University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee in May 2020 with certificates in Museum Studies and Nonprofit Management. She has done archaeology and museum work in the Midwest and Southwest. Her thesis research and interests are focused in the Southwest region, especially in museum collections management. She current- ly works at the Blackwater Draw Museum at Eastern New Mexico University. Katrina N Schmitz received her Master of Science in Anthropology and a Graduate Certificate in Museum Studies from the University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee in 2020. Her master's thesis was an analysis of the Milwaukee Pub- lic Museum's Hopewell site collection from Ross County, Ohio. She is pursu- ing a career in the museum field . Emily R. Stanton is an Anthropology PhD candidate at the University of Wis- consin–Milwaukee. She is currently writing her dissertation on gendered grave goods and elite burials in Iron Age Central Europe. Emily is also involved in an experimental archaeology project focused on re-creating a set of Iron Age grave goods. More about this project can be found here: https:// experiarchaeuwm.wixsite.com/deathmetal. Casas Grandes Ceramics at the Milwaukee Public Museum Samantha A. Bomkamp University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA Abstract: Museums across the world hold unprovenienced artifacts with valua- ble data left unresearched because of their lack of context. The Milwaukee Public Museum (MPM) holds one such collection of Casas Grandes vessels. The intent of this paper is to present an example of how a museum collection can be contextualized in order to be compared to others of its kind and contrib- ute to the knowledge of a prehistoric culture. Using a coding scheme, this re- search will present data for: 1) type and time period for each of the Casas Grandes vessels and 2) iconography analysis on the polychromes. With North- west Mexico being under-researched compared to the American Southwest or Mesoamerica, utilization of these museum collections is more important than ever. Key Words: ceramic analysis, Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, Mexico, iconography, typol- ogy, museum, collections. Introduction The Milwaukee Public Museum (MPM) currently houses 80 ceramic vessels with labeled origins of “Casas Grandes, Mexico”, but site-specific con- text is absent making this collection unprovenienced. The majority of these objects were donated in 1977 in a single accession. Since then, little research has been conducted on the collection and no background information can be gleaned. Research on this collection began in spring 2018 as part of my gradu- ate thesis. Drawing upon published studies of Casas Grandes pottery, a de- tailed coding scheme was developed in order to record formal and stylistic data that could be used to classify the vessels typologically and chronologically. Iconographic analysis was also conducted in a separate coding scheme to de- termine the stylistic patterning represented in this particular collection, thus allowing it to be compared to similar collections at other institutions in the United States and Mexico, especially those with provenience information. Through the utilization of a previously unresearched collection, this paper demonstrates the usefulness of unprovenienced museum collections as well as artifacts from Northwest Mexico. This research represents a portion of the analysis presented in my master’s thesis (Bomkamp 2020). Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology 11 (1): 50-65 (May 2021) Copyright © 2021 by Field Notes: A Journal of Collegiate Anthropology Bombkamp 51 Casas Grandes Region The Casas Grandes region is located primarily within the modern Mexican state of Chihuahua, but also extends into Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas (Figure 1). The boundaries of this culture have not yet been exactly de- fined, and debate continues over the nature and extent of Casas Grandes cul- tural influence. Due to their location, people in the Casas Grandes region had extensive trade relationships with groups in the American Southwest to the north, as well as Mesoamerican societies to the south. The archaeological chronology for the Casas Grandes region spans from about AD 700 to 1475, and the Casas Grandes cultural tradition is famous for its beautiful polychrome pottery (Minnis and Whalen 2015). Compared to the intensively studied Southwestern cultures north of the United States-Mexico border, the Casas Grandes region has received less attention from archaeologists. This stands with exception to the primary center of the Casas Grandes world, Paquimé. This site was extensively excavated during the Joint Casas Grandes Expedition (JCGE), an expedition conducted with the Institute Nacional de Antropologia e Historia (INAH) and the Amerind Foundation (Dragoon, AZ) by Charles Di Peso and colleagues from 1958 to 1961. It was the largest archaeological excavation ever undertaken in Chihuahua and resulted in eight volumes covering the intensive analysis of artifacts found at the site. It remains the largest internationally collaborative archaeological project in the United States-Mexico borderlands (Minnis and Whalen 2015, 5). Today, Paquimé is a UNESCO world heritage site and is extremely important in our understanding of the region. Much more recently, archaeologists have done excavations on smaller Casas Grandes sites through- out the region, particularly Paul Minnis and Michael Whalen (2009), as the cultural area extends much farther north and south from the primary center and includes a variety of cliff dwelling sites (e.g. Madera municipality). Archaeol- ogists in Mexico have also published research on Casas Grandes sites. Edu- ardo Gamboa Carrera, the director of the Museo de las Culturas Norte at Paquimé,

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